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Begin to Hope is truth in advertising: One hopes that Spektor’s profile
will be dramatically raised with this latest release, and those once
burned will be rewarded with one of the year’s most compelling records.

Regina Spektor’s debut, Soviet Kitsch, was an odd, exciting bird.
Aggressively quirky and unwilling to wrap even the most pop of
compositions in comforting familiarity, it heralded the arrival of a
new-school songstress capable of competing with beautiful weirdoes such
as Tori Amos, Fiona Apple, and Kate Bush. So bracing was the
avant-garde angularity of Soviet Kitsch that to hear “Fidelity,” the
opening track of Spektor’s bracing sophomore effort Begin to Hope,
approach normalcy is so startling that you wonder if her debut wasn’t
just to shake loose the fad-hungry.
Those put off by discovering that the propulsive single “Us” was an
anomaly within the context of Soviet Kitsch should dive headfirst into
the surprisingly accessible Begin to Hope. Spektor, for the most part,
sheds her arty exterior, revealing an achingly raw singer/songwriter
who (gasp!) is more old-fashioned than she’d have you believe.
“Fidelity” gives way to “Better,” which could easily be a forgotten
radio hit from the mid-’90s, a straightforward declaration of love that
shows Spektor able to dial down the vocal affectations and deliver a
sweetly hard-edged performance that will have you reaching for the
repeat button. The soaring “Samson” is breathtaking in its unadorned
beauty, laying bare Spektor’s range and heretofore partly obscured
talent at wringing pathos out of stark, evocative verses. I could go on
and on about the delights of every track, so rich and rewarding are the
songs included here: “On the Radio” is a poperatic piece of work, while
“Field Below” is a bluesy left turn that serves as the gateway to the
album’s more experimental second half.
Produced by the unlikely choice of David Kahne (I can’t say as I
would’ve thought to put the knob-twiddler for Sugar Ray in the same
studio as Spektor), Begin to Hope has the faint gloss of Top 40, but
not so much that it distracts from the occasionally brutal beauty of
Spektor’s singular vision.
Begin to Hope is truth in advertising: One hopes that Spektor’s profile
will be dramatically raised with this latest release, and those once
burned will be rewarded with one of the year’s most compelling records.

Purchase downloads for this artist at our BurnLounge.
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